Answer:
"Growth in the size of government, more interconnected world, and the domestic contributor was a Great Depression".
Explanation:
The power of the president can be classified into two sections: direct actions through the legal institutional leadership of the service and informal powers of faith and consultation necessary to operating with the legislative branch. Theodore Roosevelt in the 20th century remained the most effective presidents of the United States. The main factors that contributed to the growth of presidential power in the twentieth-century are the "growth in the size of government, more interconnected world, and the domestic contributor was a Great Depression".
Answer:
Preys
Explanation:
The plural form of prey would be preys which references to various types of preys or a collection of preys.
Answer:
Introduced by Edwin Lemert in his Social Pathology (1951), the distinction is central to labelling theory. Primary deviation refers to differentiation which is relatively insignificant, marginal, and fleeting: individuals may drift in and out of it. Secondary deviation is deviance proper.
Answer: the correct answer is c) public officials
Explanation:
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964) was an important decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in which the Court ruled that the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution's protection of the freedom of speech limits the ability of American public officials to sue and recover damages for defamation.
Answer:
Freud and his contemporaries viewed conversion symptoms as the result of:
C. the transfer of psychic energy attached to repressed emotions or memories to physical symptoms.
Explanation:
Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) was an Austrian neurologist and the father of psychoanalysis.
According to Freud and other specialists, conversion symptoms are physical symptoms unrelated to any diseases. For example, someone seems to have lost the ability to use his right hand. After undergoing examination and tests, nothing wrong is found, at least physically speaking. Freud believed that that symptom was indicative of repressed feelings or memories, as if the body were manifesting something trapped in that person's unconscious mind.